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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> CIMC Raffles Offshore (Singapore) Pte Ltd v Schahin Holding SA (Rev 1) [2014] EWHC 1742 (Comm) (09 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/1742.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1742 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) CIMC RAFFLES OFFSHORE (SINGAPORE) PTE LTD | ||
(2) YANTAL CIMC RAFFLES OFFSHORE LTD | Claimants/Respondents | |
- and - | ||
SCHAHIN HOLDING SA | Defendant | |
SALIM TAUFIC SCHAHIN | ||
FERNANDO SCHAHIN | Applicants |
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165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4046 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
CHARLES HOLROYD (instructed by Humphries Kerstetter LLP) appeared on behalf of the Applicants
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FIELD:
"The Rules Committee in 1883 is likely to have been focusing on domestic judgments and domestically based officers. If it thought at all about foreign judgments, which might be enforced in England, it is unlikely to have contemplated that a judgment creditor, having come here for that purpose, would then need assistance abroad to make the enforcement effective. The extreme informality of the process by which the rules enable an order for examination to be obtained continues to point towards a purely domestic focus. An application for an order may under CPR Pt 71 be made without notice, may be dealt with ministerially by a court officer and will lead to the automatic issue of an order (albeit with the general safeguard of the right to apply to set aside which exists under CPR r 23.10 in the case of any order made without service of the relevant application notice). These considerations all tend to point against the application of CPR 71 to company officers outside the jurisdiction."
"In my view CPR Pt 71 was not conceived with officers abroad in mind, and, although it contains no express exclusion in respect of them, there are lacking critical considerations which enabled the Court of Appeal in In re Seagull to hold that the presumption of territoriality was displaced and that the relevant statutory provision there, on its true construction and having regard to the legislative grasp or intendment, embraced a foreign officer. Although CPR Pt 71 is limited to officers of the judgment debtor company, I regard the position of such officers as closer to that of ordinary witnesses than to that of officers of a company being compulsorily wound up by the court. I conclude that CPR Pt 71 does not contemplate an application and order in relation to an officer outside the jurisdiction."
"[The judge] put to himself the following important considerations about the exercise of the Bayer v Winter jurisdiction. First, that it was important to recognise that Captain Kifah ... is simply acting in his capacity as a witness. He cited Phipson on Evidence at paragraphs 8-32 which acknowledges the possibility of a witness summons against persons temporarily within the jurisdiction, but which also emphasises the limitations upon that possibility. In effect, something like a witness summons, or an application under CPR Part 71 for disclosure by the officer of a judgment debtor company of assets in aid of execution, does not lie against persons outside the jurisdiction. That fact puts limits, explained in Phipson, upon the extent to which a summons against a non-resident temporarily within the jurisdiction may be subject to, where the opportunity afforded by such temporary presence might give rise to possible trespass upon exorbitant activity.
11. Secondly, the judge directed himself that he should be careful not to circumvent the restrictions of CPR Part 71, to which I have already referred. The court should, he said, be slow to put a party in a better position than they would be under Part 71.
34. The other aspect is that Captain Kifah, not being the litigant, is not liable for the judgment debt of IAC. All he can do is provide information about its assets. On the other hand it has to be remembered, first, that as Director General of IAC he is by virtue of that position and status as close to being a personification of IAC as it is possible to be, and also that as an officer of IAC he is liable to the execution procedure under CPR 71, at any rate if he is within the jurisdiction. Again one remembers that CPR 71 is not available against respondents outside the jurisdiction, it is essentially a domestic aid to execution." [Emphasis supplied]
"The order against Captain Kifah of which on Sunday the judge did not repent was the order that he should, by affidavit, disclose to the best of his ability the nature and extent of the assets of IAC and in particular the financial arrangements entered into it for the purposes of its new London/Baghdad service. I have no reason to doubt the judge's view that, as Director General of IAC and thus ostensibly its officer best placed to explain its financial arrangements, and indeed an officer who would be amenable to the provisions of Part 71 of the CPR, the captain was properly made subject to this disclosure order." [Emphasis supplied]
"…. Part 71 of the CPR applies to [Captain Kifah]. It puts the officers of a company, which is a judgment debtor, in a different position from the world at large. The court under that provision has the power to order such an officer to provide information about the company's means and indeed to attend court to do so. This power cannot be exercised in respect of a person who is outside the jurisdiction, as was held by the House of Lords in the case of Masri v Consolidated Contractors Limited No 4 [2009] UKHL 43, [2009] 3 WLR 305 but Captain Kifah is not outside the jurisdiction according to the evidence before us, and he is someone therefore against whom an application could have been made under Part 71." [Emphasis supplied]